Comics Review: Buffy, the Vampire Slayer - Season Eight #1
Published March 18, 2007
Back when it was still a going TV concern, I remember checking out several issues of Dark Horse's Buffy, the Vampire Slayer comic book cash-in, but I wasn't particularly impressed. It wasn't just the art (which never sufficiently approximated the way I knew these characters looked from the show) but the writing – which was so much flatter than BtVS's TV scripts. An unfair comparison, I know, but when the discrepancy 'tween show and comic is the primary thing you notice, then something is seriously wrong adaptation-wise.
Now Mister Buffy Himself, Joss Whedon, is scripting a new run of the comic version – and calling it "Season Eight" to boot – so attention must be paid by those of us with more than a passing interest in the Whedonverse. Whedon's made a connection in the series to comics before, of course: the big axe/blade wielded by the Buffster during the teleseries' finish made its debut in an earlier Dark Horse sci-fi horror comics series entitled Fray. And to make sure we recollect this, Jo Chen's cover to the first issue of Buffy, the Vampire Slayer – Season Eight features our slayer heroine holding said axe/blade oh-so-casually across her shoulders, though when we get to the actual action inside, said mystical weapon is nowhere to be seen.
Okay, already I'm attacking this book like a geeky fanatic – which also may not be entirely fair, but, realistically, it's the first draw for this title, right? So to those few Buffy fans who haven't already picked up this comic from their local comics emporium, let's get the Big Questions outta the way. Who shows up in the first issue? Buff, natch; former goofball spear-carrier Xander Harris (who gets to make his second Sgt. Fury reference in a Buffy story, this time playing off his own one-eyed self), now in a position of some importance; and bratty kid sister Dawn Summers, presently transformed after an apparent one-night stand with a magical creature. Those talked about but not seen: Buffy's old watcher Giles, current watcher Andrew and gal-pal hex-mistress Willow. Fans also learn that the stories Andrew told us in an episode of the TV spin-off series, Angel, about Buff were totally untrue: there's more than one decoy Slayer out there designed to throw the Forces of Hellmouthery off track. Missing in action: the high school principal currently serving as President on 24 and all the characters who slipped over to Angel.
As for our title lead, she's still holding onto the hard-assed ("Thanks, I work out") Leader of Wimmen role she maintained in the teleseries' final season. The world is packed with Slayers ("Eighteen hundred now, that we've counted.") and the Minions of Badness seem to have increased to accommodate this fact. The Watcher's Council, which on the show appeared to be a neo-Edwardian collective of old-fashioned tweeds, has apparently gone all high-tech and paramilitary. Issue #1 opens with our heroine parachuting with a trio of supporting Slayers into a sinister castle being held by monstrous demons (one immediate advantage that the comic has above the show, of course: the demons don't look fake 'n' rubbery) and scattered with the remains of dead humans who all have the same mysterious tattoo on their chest. "I think it's a frown turned upside down," Xander notes back at HQ, thankfully demonstrating that he still has a piece of the same ol' goofus inside him.
- Comics Review: Buffy, the Vampire Slayer - Season Eight #1
- Published: March 18, 2007
- Type: Review
- Section: Books
- Filed Under: Books: Comics and Graphic Novels, Books: Entertainment, Books: Fantasy, Books: Horror, Books: SF
- Writer: Bill Sherman
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Comments
Just coz Darla's dead doesn't mean she won't come back again, of course (she's already done it several times). But I get your point . . .





The most interesting thing about these new comics, I think, is that, for the first time, Buffy really has to be about Buffy and not any of the four vampires that were a constant throughout the two series. Continuity-wise, Spike and Angel are still on Angel for at least another year, Darla's dead, and Druisilla is nothing without the other three anyway. In some ways, it seems like only half a Buffy that way, but it might be nice for them to bring in some new themes.